Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research (Jan 2021)

Effectiveness of Tirobot-assisted vertebroplasty in treating thoracolumbar osteoporotic compression fracture

  • Boyao Wang,
  • Jiang Cao,
  • Jie Chang,
  • Guoyong Yin,
  • Weihua Cai,
  • Qingqing Li,
  • Zhenfei Huang,
  • Lipeng Yu,
  • Xiaojian Cao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13018-021-02211-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Percutaneous kyphoplasty is the main method in the treatment of thoracolumbar osteoporotic compression fractures. However, much radiation exposure during the operation harms the health of surgeons and patients. In addition, the accuracy of this surgery still needs to be improved. This study aimed to assess the radiation exposure and clinical efficacy of Tirobot-assisted vertebroplasty in treating thoracolumbar osteoporotic compression fracture. Methods Included in this retrospective cohort study were 60 patients (60–90 years) who had undergone unilateral vertebroplasty for thoracolumbar osteoporotic compression fracture at our hospital between June 2019 and June 2020. All showed no systemic diseases and were assigned to Tirobot group (treated with Tirobot-assisted approach) and control group (treated with traditional approach). Fluoroscopic frequency, operative duration, length of stay (LOS), post-operative complications (cement leakage, infection, and thrombosis), and pre-operative and pre-discharge indexes (VAS score, JOA score, and Cobb’s angle) were compared. Results The fluoroscopic frequency (P < 0.001) and post-operative complications (P = 0.035) in Tirobot group were significantly lower than those in control group. The operative duration and LOS in the Tirobot group were shorter than those in the control group, but the differences were not statistically significant (P = 0.183). Pre-discharge VAS score and Cobb’s angle decreased, and JOA increased after surgeries in both groups. These three indexes showed a significant difference after surgery in each group (P < 0.001), but not between groups (P VAS = 0.175, P Cobb’s = 0.585, P JOA = 0.448). Conclusion The Tirobot-assisted vertebroplasty can reduce surgery-related trauma, post-operative complications, and patients’ and operators’ exposure to radiation. As a safe and effective strategy, this surgery can realize the quick recovery from thoracolumbar osteoporotic compression fracture.

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